Deadline to vacate Abbotsford homeless camp passes - Action News
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British Columbia

Deadline to vacate Abbotsford homeless camp passes

Homeless people and protesters are refusing to leave Jubilee Park as they launch a human rights complaint against the City of Abbotsford, after chicken manure was spread on another homeless camp earlier this year.

City gave campers until 4 p.m. PT Wednesday to leave Jubilee Park or face an injunction

Homeless camp deadline passes

11 years ago
Duration 2:13
Jubilee Park campers were told to leave by 4 p.m. Wednesday

Homeless people and protesters are refusing to leave Jubilee Park as they launch a human rights complaint against the City of Abbotsford, after chicken manure was spread on another homeless camp earlier this year.

On Monday, AbbotsfordMayor BruceBanmantold campers in the city's Jubilee Park they had48 hours toleave, citing nightlyceremonial fires and possible drug overdoses as safety risks.

However, the 4 p.m. Wednesday deadline has passed and the campers, some of whom have been in thepark for 37 days, remain,hoping to bring attention to the way drug-addicted andhomelesspeople have been treated inAbbotsford.

The B.C./Yukon Association of Drug War Survivors, the group behind the Jubilee Park camp, and six homeless individuals announced Tuesday that they planto suethe city and theAbbotsfordPolice Department.

In a newsrelease issued Wednesday,Pivot Legal Societys DJLarkin, who is representing the group,cited previous incidents in whichAbbotsfordofficialssmearedchicken manure on ahomelesscamp,and in which police allegedlyslashedandbear-sprayedtents and property.

Larkin said the complaint focuses on a number of incidents and actions that appear to discriminate against homeless individuals.The complaint alleges that, beyond the camp-related events, "the homeless in Abbotsford have been treated as outsiders and subjected to treatment designed to push them out of the community over a sustained period of time."

"Everyone in Abbotsford, regardless of their housing situation, has the right to security, to access public space, and to be treated in a non-discriminatory manner," Larkin said."We are helping this group of people defend their rights because police and municipal officials cannot use harassment to drive marginalized people out of their city."

Abbotsfordofficials have said they are considering replacing the 16 tents set up in the park withpermanent structures and are heading to Portland, Ore., to see how that city's'dignity camp' works.